
Disputed Pasts
How Brazil’s reckoning with the memory of military dictatorship shapes today’s political divides and populist revival.
Brazil’s military dictatorship ended in 1985, but its history still looms large over the country. Since the restoration of democracy, national politics have been shaped by heated contestation over the dictatorship’s legacy. Cristina Buarque de Hollanda and JosÉ Szwako examine how the state, the military, and civil society have variously mourned, celebrated, and suppressed memories of Brazil’s violent past—and to what ends.
As the dictatorship faltered under pressure from the opposition in the streets and in Congress, popular opinion favored democracy, which often meant forgetting. Today, the Brazilian left contends that the past has been silenced, paving the way for Jair Bolsonaro and the far right. Yet the past has been intensely contested: media outlets, social movements, and official commissions have long documented the dictatorship and spurred reparations. Disputed Pasts argues that the conservative ascendency is a reaction to these efforts of remembrance. The right seeks to rehabilitate the violent past by discrediting victims and elevating the dictatorship’s anti-communist ideology. Far from forgetting the past, Bolsonaro and Bolsonarismo remember it and call it just.
- Alaotsikko
- Forgetting and Remembering the Dictatorship in Brazil
- Kirjailija
- Cristina Buarque de Hollanda, José Szwako
- ISBN
- 9781477334072
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 454 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 14.7.2026
- Kustantaja
- UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PRESS
- Sivumäärä
- 296